A Private Chef Shares Her Festive Cooking Tips & Favourite Drinks


I love making an easy turkey and ham pie with the leftover meat from Christmas Day lunch. It’s the perfect dinner for those hazy, lazy days in between Christmas and New Year. You can put any leftover veg into it too, and even mix leftover gravy into the sauce. For a pie that serves four to six, melt 40g of unsalted butter in a saucepan and then whisk in 40g of plain flour to make a roux. Slowly pour in 350ml of turkey stock and stir until the sauce thickens, before adding 100ml of double cream. Grate in ¼ teaspoon of nutmeg and season with salt and pepper. Place 250g of turkey meat and 250g of ham (cubed) into a pie dish and pour over the white sauce. Top with one roll of ready-made puff pastry and brush with egg wash to get a nice glossy finish. Bake the pie in a preheated oven at 195°C/Gas Mark 5 for 30-40 minutes or until the pastry is golden brown. Serve with a bottle of Malbec or Shiraz, both of which can stand up to the rich pastry and salty ham. 

One of my favourite cocktails is a dry vodka martini with blue cheese stuffed olives. I often joke that my perfect martini is just vodka poured into a jar of olives and shaken over ice. But the blue cheese and olives bring that festive edge and doubles up as a snack. Any more than one, though, and my productivity levels plummet, and no one will be getting dinner! To make it, stuff three green olives with the blue cheese (like Stilton, Roquefort or Gorgonzola) and thread onto a cocktail stick. Shake 60ml of vodka and 1 tablespoon of vermouth over ice in a cocktail shaker, adding a splash of the briny olive water if you like. Strain into a chilled martini glass and garnish with the stuffed olive to serve. 

Sauternes is a great pairing with cheese. I love a bottle of this as the notes of honey and dried apricot work so well with salty flavours. It’s also great with prosciutto if, like me, you add cured meats to your cheeseboard. I’ve been making medlar jelly with some of the fruit from our tree at home, which is the perfect addition, as are lots of crispy crackers. 

New Year’s Eve always calls for bubbly. I do like an English sparkling wine and Rathfinny’s Classic Cuvée is my current favourite. They have a stunning vineyard near the Sussex coast where you can book in for tastings and eat at their excellent restaurant. I also love Patron Tequila’s XO Café, which is the ultimate party drink. My friends and I are still in mourning from it being discontinued, but there are a few places you can still get it, like The Whisky Exchange. Thankfully, we all bought a fair amount of it a couple of years ago and are still working our way through the stock. I’ll normally drink it neat and ice cold or use it to make espresso martinis.   

I prefer ‘picky bits’ for dinner on NYE. I’ll make canapés like blinis with cream cheese and smoked salmon, and Brie and cranberry profiteroles. Plus, my spicy Parmesan biscuits are perfect with champagne. To make them (this recipe makes 20), soften 85g of unsalted butter and mix with 90g of grated parmesan. Mix 105g of plain flour, ¼ teaspoon of baking powder, ½ teaspoon of chili powder, and ½ teaspoon of garlic powder in a separate bowl. Add the flour mixture to the butter mixture and work it into a dough, adding small amounts of one beaten egg to help it come together. Stop adding egg before it gets too sticky (you will probably only need half an egg). Turn the dough out onto a piece of cling film and use that to form it into a long sausage (around 9 inches). Wrap it and roll it to form an even log. Chill in the freezer for 15 minutes whilst the oven preheats to 175°C/Gas Mark 3. Brush the dough with an egg wash and roll it into 3 tablespoons of sesame or nigella seeds to form a crust, then slice into thin rounds and place on a lined baking tray. Bake the biscuits in the oven for 10-15 minutes until they have risen slightly and turned golden brown. Allow them to harden for 10 minutes before serving. 

Follow @RosannaEtc and find more recipes, and food and wine pairing tips at RosannaEtc.com


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